Legend has it that Australian engineer Phil Irving placed a tracing
of the Vincent 500 motor on top of a drawing of the same motor in such
a manner that it formed a 47° V twin. True or not, there was an excellent
reason for the chosen angle in that tooling costs for the new motor could
be kept to a minimum.
Prior to WW2, Phil Vincent bought the rights to the Howard R. Davies
company, (founded in 1924?), and adopted the name Vincent-HRD for his entry
into the British motorcycle market. Other than the name, there was little
similarity between the HRD and the new model, a J.A.P. powered single released
in 1929.
The new Rapide was announced to the world in 1937. One statement in
the press read: 'The idea behind the design, is the production
of an exceptionally lively, high-performance mount with the same superb
handling as the smaller models in the range. Not only this, but the makers
have aimed at providing a 100 mph machine that is docile and does not rely
on supertuning for its out-of-the-ordinary capabilities or require an ultra-high
compression ratio.'
The Series A Rapide had many innovations, not least of which was the
cantilever rear springing system already proven on the single-cylinder
Vincent HRDs. Decades later Yamaha introduced their monoshock system -
for all intents and purposes a straight copy of the Vincent system. The
Rapide's other features included a stainless steel tank, twin brakes on
both wheels, and a duplex primary chain connecting the powerful V twin
engine to the Burman four speed gearbox.
These machines proved fast and reliable, and sold reasonably well up
until the onset of war in 1939. The Series B Rapide was announced in 1945,
very shortly after the war's end. The new machine had many refinements
and changes including a 50° cylinder angle and internal oil galleries.
This basic layout was retained for the C and D models, the last of which
was built in 1955.
A factory-prepared, unfaired Black Lightning achieved 150mph at Bonneville
Salt Flats in 1948, ridden by Rollie Free who had stripped to a swimsuit
in search of extra speed.
In 1948 the Indian factory sent a Chief to the Vincent factory to have
a Rapide engine fitted. Examples were successfully tested on both sides
of the Atlantic but the machine did not go into production. A photograph
of a very fine Australian restoration is available at IndianChiefMotorcycles.com.
In 1998 an Australian company, RTV, was formed to build replica Vincent
motors which were inserted in a modern high-performance chassis. Very few
motors were built, and the company folded the following year.
VINCENT HRD - Series A Rapide
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Specifications
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| Make: |
Vincent HRD |
| Model: |
Series A Rapide |
| Engine: |
998 cc (84 x 90 mm bore and stroke)
47° OHV V Twin |
| Tyres: |
3 x 20 in front, 3 x 19 in rear |
| Frame: |
Brazed lug duplex tubular cradle.
Cantilever rear springing |
| Front forks: |
Girder forks |
| Brakes: |
Twin drums, 7 in diameter in front
and rear |
| Weight: |
400 lb |
| Wheelbase: |
58.5 in |
| Manufacturer: |
The Vincent-HRD Co. Ltd., Great North
Road, Stevenage, Herts |
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| VINCENT
HRD - Series C Black Shadow |
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Specifications
|
| Make: |
Vincent HRD |
| Model: |
Series C Black Shadow |
| Engine: |
998 cc (84 x 90 mm bore and stroke)
50° OHV V Twin, 7.3:1 CR, polished conrods |
| Carburetor: |
2 x 1.125 inch type 29 Amals |
| Ignition: |
Lucas Magneto ('55 models had Kettering ignition) |
| Electrics: |
6v 45w dynamo |
| Lubrication: |
Dry sump, 3 US quarts |
| Gearbox: |
Burman 4 speed, triplex chain primary, wet multiplate clutch |
| Final Drive: |
530 chain, 46/21 sprockets |
| Tyres: |
3 x 20 in front, 3.50 x 19 in rear |
| Wheels |
Front: 1.65 x 20 in.steel rim; Rear: 1.65 x 19 in.steel rim. |
| Frame: |
Brazed lug duplex tubular cradle.
Cantilever rear springing |
| Front forks: |
Vincent Girdraulic forks, 3" travel |
| Brakes: |
Twin drums, 7 in diameter in front
and rear, single leading shoe 7/8" wide. |
| Weight: |
455 lb - 206 kg [Wet - 500 lb (227kg)] |
| Wheelbase: |
56.5 in. (1435mm) |
| Seat height: |
32.5 in. (826mm) |
| Performance: |
125 mph / 201 km/h - 55 bhp at 5500
rpm |
| Fuel Capacity |
3.5 gallons / 16 litres (Other sources suggest 5 gal - 19litres) |
| Manufacturer: |
The Vincent-HRD Co. Ltd., Great North
Road, Stevenage, Herts |
The Black Lightning had different cams, higher strength connecting rods,
larger inlet ports, polished rocker gear, steel idler gears, racing carburetors,
a manual-advance magneto and was available with compression ratios between
6.8:1 and 12.5:1.
For Sale: Philip Vincent Collection
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